There's been discussion about this on various threads so I thought a dedicated thread might be fun. This could also be a general board topic but I'm not familiar with the economics in other cities so I kept it here in the DMV.
I feel like prices have gone up during covid. 3 an hour seemed like it was the average for a long time before the pandemic. Once in a while you'd see 400, and very rarely 500 and up. Now I see 600 a lot. Is this a pandemic phenomenon or was it just time for a reset?
Supply and demand:
I can imagine providers wanting to be more careful and either reducing their hours or taking a break from the industry. And let's face it - mongers are gunna mong. So maybe supply contracted and demand remained flat? Price-in covid risk and that would be the easy answer for upward pressure on rates.
But...
On the other hand, I get a feeling (at least from reading this board) that in this town there are a lot of mongers my age and therefore in a higher risk category covid-wise. Presumably some number of slightly younger (say aged 35-50 year old?) hobbyists would also decide the risk isn't worth it and would take a break. Add in unemployment in other sectors of the industry (dancers, etc) and in other industries (bartenders, waiters colledge grads) and and I can imagine a supply-side increase. Which makes me think prices would at the very least stay flat.
So what is your analysis? And what are your predictions for the supply/demand curve this summer (or whenever everyone is vaccinated) and how that will impact forward pricing? Will demand (and therefor prices) skyrocket? Or will providers increase travel, get back in the industry, etc, and generate a supply glut? If so, will that produce downward pressure on pricing? I think the latter.
Granted, hard data (pun intended) on any of this is scarce so there's a lot of speculation here - but hey, it's a snowy Super Bowl Sunday and the game doesn't start for hours.